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The Distribution of Stock Return Volatility

29 Jun 2011

Article by: Torben G. Andersen, Tim Bollerslev, Francis X. Diebold, Heiko Ebens
Published by: The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
Date: Oct 2000

“We exploit direct model-free measures of daily equity return volatility and correlation obtained from high-frequency intraday transaction prices on individual stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average over a five-year period to confirm, solidify and extend existing characterizations of stock return volatility and correlation. We find that the unconditional distributions of the variances and covariances for all thirty stocks are leptokurtic and highly skewed to the right, while the logarithmic standard deviations and correlations all appear approximately Gaussian. Moreover, the distributions of the returns scaled by the realized standard deviations are also Gaussian. Consistent with our documentation of remarkably precise scaling laws under temporal aggregation, the realized logarithmic standard deviations and correlations all show strong temporal dependence and appear to be well described by long-memory processes. Positive returns have less impact on future variances and correlations than negative returns of the same absolute magnitude, although the economic importance of this asymmetry is minor. Finally, there is strong evidence that equity volatilities and correlations move together, possibly reducing the benefits to portfolio diversification when the market is most volatile. Our findings are broadly consistent with a latent volatility fact or structure, and they set the stage for improved high-dimensional volatility modeling and out-of-sample forecasting, which in turn hold promise for the development of better decision making in practical situations of risk management, portfolio allocation, and asset pricing.”

Full article (PDF): Link

 
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Posted in Implied volatility, Realized volatility

 

Priced Risk and Asymmetric Volatility in the Cross-Section of Skewness

22 Jun 2011

Article by: Robert Engle, Abhishek Mistry
Published by: New York University, Stern School of Business
Date: 12 Aug 2007

“We investigate the sources of skewness in aggregate risk-factors and the cross-section of stock returns. In an ICAPM setting with conditional volatility, we find theoretical time series predictions on the relationships among volatility, returns, and skewness for priced risk factors. Market returns resemble these predictions; however, size, bookto-market, and momentum factor returns show alternative behavior, leading us to conclude these factors are not priced risks. We link aggregate risk and skewness to individual stocks and find empirically that the risk aversion effect manifests in individual stock skewness. Additionally, we find several firm characteristics that explain stock skewness. Smaller firms, value firms, highly levered firms, and firms with poor credit ratings have more positive skewness.”

Full article (PDF): Link

 
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Posted in Implied volatility

 

Volatility ETNs: A Viable Hedging Instrument

12 Jun 2011

Article by: Oliver Schwindler
Published by: Seeking Alpha
Date: 18 May 2011

“Despite the controversial discussion about ETNs focused on volatility, these instruments have caught a lot of interest from investors. However, it’s difficult to judge whether it’s mainly retail investors with a buy and hold approach or traders using these instruments for short term trading/hedging or even sophisticated investors like hedge funds who invest/trade these instruments.

“In my view the biggest critique seems to be the fact that both ETNs – iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (VXX) and the iPath S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term Futures ETN (VXZ) – are constantly loosing value. I will present a quick study which clearly shows that these ETNs are viable hedging instruments even for a traditional buy and hold investment approach.”

Full article: Link

 
 

Expected Returns and Stock Volatility

04 Jun 2011

Article by: Kenneth R. French, G. William Schwet, Robert F. Stambaugh
Published by: Journal of Financial Economics
Date: Dec 1986

“This paper examines the relation between stock returns and stock market volatility. We find
evidence that the expected market risk premium (the expected return on a stock portfolio minus
the Treasury bill yield) is positively related to the predictable volatility of stock returns. There is
also evidence that unexpected stock market returns are negatively related to the unexpected
change in the volatility of stock returns. This negative relation provides indirect evidence of a
positive relation between expected risk premiums and volatility.”

Full article (PDF): Link

 
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Posted in Realized volatility, Trading ideas

 
 
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